Biological activated carbon filter for greywater post-treatment: Long-term TOC removal with adsorption and biodegradation

Biological activated carbon (BAC) filters can be used to remove residual total organic carbon (TOC) from greywater after a membrane bioreactor. The two main TOC removal processes are adsorption to the granular activated carbon (GAC) and biological degradation. Biodegradation leads to the growth of m...

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Main Authors: Angelika Hess, Eberhard Morgenroth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-12-01
Series:Water Research X
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589914721000268
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spelling doaj-b4d8f62b863c49d4bf46fcac7a40270b2021-09-25T05:11:11ZengElsevierWater Research X2589-91472021-12-0113100113Biological activated carbon filter for greywater post-treatment: Long-term TOC removal with adsorption and biodegradationAngelika Hess0Eberhard Morgenroth1Eawag: Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, 8600 Dübendorf, Switzerland; ETH Zürich, Institute of Environmental Engineering, 8093 Zürich, SwitzerlandEawag: Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, 8600 Dübendorf, Switzerland; ETH Zürich, Institute of Environmental Engineering, 8093 Zürich, Switzerland; Corresponding author.Biological activated carbon (BAC) filters can be used to remove residual total organic carbon (TOC) from greywater after a membrane bioreactor. The two main TOC removal processes are adsorption to the granular activated carbon (GAC) and biological degradation. Biodegradation leads to the growth of microorganisms in the filter bed, which can lead to increased pressure loss over the filter bed. However, the roles of sorption and biodegradation in long-term TOC removal and how they complement each other are unclear. We monitored TOC removal from greywater in a BAC filter installed following a membrane bioreactor over more than 900 days. Removal performance depended on the operational time of the BAC filter, the influent TOC concentration, and in the upper part of the filter on the empty bed contact time (EBCT). Across the overall filter, the EBCT did not significantly influence TOC removal, showing that the filter was sufficiently large for the range of flow rates observed. Analysis of the long-term data revealed the equal importance of sorption and biodegradation over the whole operation period and the whole filter bed. Most of the TOC was removed in the upper part of the filter, where biodegradation was the dominant mechanism. In the lower part of the filter, sorption capacity remained and allowed high influent TOC concentrations to be buffered. The generous filter design with low average filtration rates ensured long-term TOC removal. The only maintenance needed was backwashing, which was required only after more than 800 days of operation. Backwashing effectively reduced the pressure loss but had no significant influence on the effluent water quality. Our study shows that BAC filters are a suitable post-treatment step for the treatment of greywater with highly variable flow and TOC concentrations.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589914721000268Biological activated carbonGreywater reuseAdsorptionBiodegradationBackwashing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Angelika Hess
Eberhard Morgenroth
spellingShingle Angelika Hess
Eberhard Morgenroth
Biological activated carbon filter for greywater post-treatment: Long-term TOC removal with adsorption and biodegradation
Water Research X
Biological activated carbon
Greywater reuse
Adsorption
Biodegradation
Backwashing
author_facet Angelika Hess
Eberhard Morgenroth
author_sort Angelika Hess
title Biological activated carbon filter for greywater post-treatment: Long-term TOC removal with adsorption and biodegradation
title_short Biological activated carbon filter for greywater post-treatment: Long-term TOC removal with adsorption and biodegradation
title_full Biological activated carbon filter for greywater post-treatment: Long-term TOC removal with adsorption and biodegradation
title_fullStr Biological activated carbon filter for greywater post-treatment: Long-term TOC removal with adsorption and biodegradation
title_full_unstemmed Biological activated carbon filter for greywater post-treatment: Long-term TOC removal with adsorption and biodegradation
title_sort biological activated carbon filter for greywater post-treatment: long-term toc removal with adsorption and biodegradation
publisher Elsevier
series Water Research X
issn 2589-9147
publishDate 2021-12-01
description Biological activated carbon (BAC) filters can be used to remove residual total organic carbon (TOC) from greywater after a membrane bioreactor. The two main TOC removal processes are adsorption to the granular activated carbon (GAC) and biological degradation. Biodegradation leads to the growth of microorganisms in the filter bed, which can lead to increased pressure loss over the filter bed. However, the roles of sorption and biodegradation in long-term TOC removal and how they complement each other are unclear. We monitored TOC removal from greywater in a BAC filter installed following a membrane bioreactor over more than 900 days. Removal performance depended on the operational time of the BAC filter, the influent TOC concentration, and in the upper part of the filter on the empty bed contact time (EBCT). Across the overall filter, the EBCT did not significantly influence TOC removal, showing that the filter was sufficiently large for the range of flow rates observed. Analysis of the long-term data revealed the equal importance of sorption and biodegradation over the whole operation period and the whole filter bed. Most of the TOC was removed in the upper part of the filter, where biodegradation was the dominant mechanism. In the lower part of the filter, sorption capacity remained and allowed high influent TOC concentrations to be buffered. The generous filter design with low average filtration rates ensured long-term TOC removal. The only maintenance needed was backwashing, which was required only after more than 800 days of operation. Backwashing effectively reduced the pressure loss but had no significant influence on the effluent water quality. Our study shows that BAC filters are a suitable post-treatment step for the treatment of greywater with highly variable flow and TOC concentrations.
topic Biological activated carbon
Greywater reuse
Adsorption
Biodegradation
Backwashing
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589914721000268
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AT eberhardmorgenroth biologicalactivatedcarbonfilterforgreywaterposttreatmentlongtermtocremovalwithadsorptionandbiodegradation
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